Immortal game
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The immortal game was a chess game played in 1851 by Adolf Anderssen and Lionel Kieseritzky. It is one of the most famous chess games of all time.
General Description
Adolf Anderssen was one of the strongest players of his time, and was considered by many to be the world champion after winning the 1851 London tournament. Lionel Kieseritzky lived in France much of his life, where he gave chess lessons, and played games for five francs an hour at the Café de la Regence in Paris. Kieseritzky was well known for being able to beat lesser players despite handicapping himself - by playing without his queen, for example.
The immortal game was an informal one, played between these two great players at the Simpson's-in-the-Strand Divan in London. Kieseritzky was very impressed when the game was over, and telegraphed the moves of the game to his Parisian chess club. The French chess magazine La Regence published the game in July 1851. This game was later nicknamed "The Immortal Game" in 1855 by the Austrian Ernst Falkbeer.
The immortal game has resurfaced in many unusual guises. The town of Marostica, Italy has replayed the immortal game with live players, dressed as a chess pieces, every year from September 2, 1923. The position after the 20th move is on a 1984 stamp from Surinam. The final part of the game was used as an inspiration for the chess game in the 1982 science fiction movie Blade Runner, though the chessboards used in the film are not arranged exactly the same as those in the immortal game (indeed, although the film's game is played remotely by two people, each with a supposedly identical board, the boards do not actually match each other). It was also the basis of a detective novel of the same name by Mark Coggins.
This game is acclaimed as an excellent demonstration of the style of chess play in the 1800s, where rapid development and attack were considered the most effective way to win, where many gambits and counter-gambits were offered (and not accepting them would be considered slightly ungentlemanly), and where material was often held in contempt. These games, with their rapid attacks and counter-attacks, are often entertaining to review, even if some of the moves would no longer be considered the best by today's standards.
In this game, Anderssen wins the game despite sacrificing a bishop on move 11, both rooks starting on move 18, and the queen on move 22 to produce checkmate. He offered both rooks to show that two active pieces are worth a dozen sleeping at home. Anderssen later demonstrated the same kind of approach in the Evergreen Game.
The game Friedrich Saemisch – Aron Nimzowitsch, Copenhagen 1923, is sometimes called the "Immortal Zugzwang game" because the final position is widely accepted as being a rare instance of zugzwang occurring in the middlegame (see Zugzwang for more information and the moves).
The game is given below in algebraic chess notation. Some published versions of the game have errors, as described in the annotations.
Annotated moves of the game
- White: Adolf Anderssen
- Black: Lionel Kieseritzky
- Opening: King's Gambit, C33
- 1. e4 e5 2. f4
- 2...exf4
- 3. Bc4 Qh4+
John Savard's commentary claims that the moves were actually: 3.... b5 4. Bxb5 Qh4+ 5. Kf1 with the moves afterwards the same. These are transposed positions, with the final resulting position the same. However, no other work describes this sequence of moves, and Savard was likely mistaken.
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- 4. Kf1 b5?
- 5. Bxb5 Nf6 6. Nf3
- 6...Qh6 7. d3
- 7...Nh5
- 8. Nh4 Qg5
- 9. Nf5 c6
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- 10. g4 Nf6 11. Rg1!
- 11.... cxb5?
- 12. h4!
- 12...Qg6 13. h5 Qg5 14. Qf3
- Bxf4, which will trap Black's queen (the queen has no safe place to go),
- e5, which would attack Black's knight at f6 while simultaneously exposing an attack by White's queen on the unprotected black rook at a8.
- 14...Ng8
- 15. Bxf4 Qf6 16. Nc3 Bc5
- 17. Nd5
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- 17...Qxb2
- 18. Bd6!!
- 18... Bxg1?
The Mammoth Book of the World's Greatest Chess Games has a mistake at this point; move 18 black through move 20 black inclusive are different. Mammoth records the moves as: 18... Qxa1+ 19. Ke2 Bxg1 20. e5 Na6 21. Nxg7+ Kd8 22. Qf6+!! Nxf6 Be7# 1-0 However, it seems to be the only source of this claim; other resources including Eade's book and the Chesslive Online Database give the moves listed here. Nor does Mammoth explain why it has a different move sequence than other works. The commentary here presumes that Mammoth is in error at this point. Note that this is a reordering of the moves, and the positions become the same again at the end of move 20.
- 19. e5!
- 19...Qxa1+ 20. Ke2
- 20...Na6
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- 21. Nxg7+ Kd8 22. Qf6+
- 22...Nxf6 23. Be7# 1-0
Savielly Tartakower described the match as "a beautiful game."
[The moves in PGN format] (see portable game notation).
See also
- Evergreen game
- http://www.chessbase.com/shop/productlist.asp?product=video&subd=&user=&coin=
- http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1018910
References
- Burgess, Graham, John Nunn, and John Emms. The Mammoth Book of the World's Greatest Chess Games. 1998. New York: Carroll and Graf Publishers, Inc. ISBN 0-7867-0587-6. This detailed summary unfortunately has an error starting in move 18.
- Chernev, Irving. The Chess Companion. 1968. ISBN 0-671-20104-2.
- Coggins, Mark. The Immortal Game. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/01/02/RV97450.DTL
- Eade, James. Chess for Dummies. 1996. Foster City, CA: IDG Books Worldwide, Inc. ISBN 0-7645-5003-9.
- Hayes, David. The Immortal Game. http://www.logicalchess.com/resources/bestgames/traditional/game13parent.html
- Kavalek, Lubomir. Chess (newspaper column). Washington Post. July 2003.
- Michael Mertineit. The Immortal Game - The Movie. http://www.chessbase.com/shop/productlist.asp?product=video&subd=&user=&coin=
- Savard, John. The Immortal Game. http://www.hypermaths.org/quadibloc/chess/ch02.htm This is an interesting move-by-move description, but unfortunately marred with some errors starting in move 3 and move 8 (the moves claimed were not the moves made).
- Savielly Tartakower and J. du Mont. 500 Master Games of Chess. Dover Publications, June 1, 1975, ISBN 0486232085.
- Wheeler, David A. The Immortal Game. http://www.dwheeler.com
- Chesslive Online Database. http://www.chesslive.de
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